TLDR: In a brief but pointed reflection, Joseph Goldstein addresses the fundamental question of what consciousness is—a question that sits at the intersection of neuroscience, philosophy, and contemplative practice. Rather than offering a definitive answer, Goldstein frames consciousness as one of spirituality's most persistent mysteries, inviting practitioners to investigate their own direct experience of awareness as the only reliable starting point.
What Is Consciousness, Really?
Consciousness remains one of the most elusive phenomena humans can observe. We experience it directly every moment—the sense that "I am aware," that something is happening right now—yet defining it precisely has confounded philosophers, scientists, and contemplatives for centuries. Joseph Goldstein, a founding teacher of the Insight Meditation Society and a lineage holder in Theravada Buddhism, approaches this puzzle not as an abstract intellectual exercise, but as a core inquiry within contemplative practice.
What makes consciousness mysterious is that it appears to be both utterly familiar and completely inaccessible to external verification. You know what it feels like to be conscious. But you cannot point to consciousness in the way you point to a cup or a mountain. It has no color, no shape, no location. This paradox—that consciousness is the most immediate fact of experience and yet the most difficult to pin down—is what Goldstein addresses in this reflection.
Why Science Struggles with Consciousness
The scientific method requires observation and measurement, but consciousness seems to resist both. When neuroscientists map brain activity, they can identify which regions activate during thought, emotion, or perception. But identifying neural correlates of consciousness is not the same as explaining consciousness itself. The question remains: why should subjective experience—the felt sense of awareness—arise from physical brain processes at all? This is often called "the hard problem of consciousness."
Goldstein's brief remarks suggest that contemplative teachers have never sought to resolve this problem through external instruments or theories alone. Instead, they have always pointed practitioners inward, toward direct investigation of awareness itself. The tool is not a microscope or MRI machine, but sustained attention—meditation.
Direct Investigation as the Path Forward
In the contemplative tradition, particularly in Theravada Buddhism where Goldstein trained, the approach to consciousness is empirical in a different sense: it is based on repeatable, first-person observation. When you sit quietly and pay careful attention to your own mind, what do you find? This is not a rhetorical question. Practitioners are invited to look directly at the arising and passing of thoughts, sensations, and awareness itself.
Through sustained practice, several observations become clear. Consciousness is not static—it is constantly changing. It is not unified—different senses and mental processes seem to operate semi-independently. And it is not fully under voluntary control—thoughts and sensations arise unbidden. These direct observations have formed the basis of Buddhist psychology for over two thousand years, long before neuroscience developed its current vocabulary.
Goldstein's framing suggests that the "mystery" of consciousness is not a problem to be solved like a math equation. Rather, it is a living question that deepens the more you investigate it. The more closely you look at your own awareness, the more subtle and intricate it becomes. This investigation itself becomes part of the spiritual path.
Consciousness as Ground of Experience
One crucial insight from contemplative traditions is that consciousness is not primarily an object of experience—it is the ground in which all experience occurs. When you see a color, hear a sound, or think a thought, awareness is the space in which that event takes place. Most practitioners spend their lives focused on the content of consciousness—what they are thinking, feeling, or perceiving. The contemplative turn involves shifting attention toward consciousness itself, toward the background of all experience.
This shift is not merely intellectual. It cannot be achieved by thinking harder about consciousness. Instead, it requires a sustained relaxation of attention from its usual preoccupation with objects and a gentle turning toward the quality of awareness that registers those objects. In this turning, consciousness reveals properties that thought alone cannot access.
Where to Go From Here
If you are drawn to the question of consciousness—what it is, how it works, why it seems both obvious and utterly mysterious—Goldstein's full talk on the mystery of consciousness in Episode 254 of Insight Hour offers deeper exploration. Beyond intellectual inquiry, the clearest path forward is direct practice. Begin a meditation practice, even a simple one: sit quietly, and observe your own mind without judgment. Notice thoughts as they arise and pass. Notice the space between thoughts. Notice the quality of awareness that registers all of it. This investigation is available to you right now and requires no special equipment or belief. The mystery of consciousness is not something that happens elsewhere—it is happening in your own awareness, in every moment, waiting for your attention.



